EU spending will total €135.5bn next year under a deal reached by EU negotiators
overnight, which included extra funds to fight soaring youth unemployment in the
28-nation bloc. The deal, which cuts EU spending
by about 6pc from this year, is the first to reflect the new terms for EU
budgets from 2014-20 agreed by the bloc’s leaders in February and had little
room to manoevre on the overall figures involved. “I’m glad that we could reach
an agreement with the European
Parliament on the financing of priority areas such as growth, employment,
innovation and humanitarian aid,” said Algimantas Rimkunas, deputy finance
minister for Lithuania, which
holds the EU’s rotating presidency. The deal reached after more than 16 hours
of negotiations includes up to €3.9bn to support job creation, training and
apprenticeships for the estimated 19 million young Europeans currently out of
work. Critics say the extra cash is a drop in the ocean, working out at about
€200 for every unemployed young person in the region. The vast majority of EU
spending - around two thirds of the total - will be spent on subsidies for
European farmers and investment projects such as road construction in the bloc’s
poorer central and eastern European member states. The agreement must now be
rubber-stamped by EU ministers and the full parliament before it can enter
force. The European
Commission had originally proposed a budget of €136bn for next year, which
the parliament had sought to increase to €136.4bn. As part of the earlier deal
on the EU’s long-term budget, funds earmarked but not spent in a particular
budget year can be carried over to the next year’s budget, subject to approval
by EU governments. The European Union budget is equivalent to about 1pc of the
bloc’s annual gross domestic product - a small fraction of total EU government
spending of almost 50pc of GDP in 2012. Reuters
I have been warning about the ever increasing powers of the EU for some time now, could this be the straw that finally breaks the camels back? What sovereign Govt. will tolerate such interference in it's financial affairs? If this measure is allowed to happen it signals the end of Democracy in Europe, is that a price worth paying? As I see it we now have no choice but to vote UKIP to remove ourselves from this wholly dictatorial club before we lose our sovereignty forever.
I have been warning about the ever increasing powers of the EU for some time now, could this be the straw that finally breaks the camels back? What sovereign Govt. will tolerate such interference in it's financial affairs? If this measure is allowed to happen it signals the end of Democracy in Europe, is that a price worth paying? As I see it we now have no choice but to vote UKIP to remove ourselves from this wholly dictatorial club before we lose our sovereignty forever.
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